Helen Phifer Crime & Thriller Writerhttps://helenphifer.wordpress.com
Just another WordPress.com siteSat, 17 Feb 2018 11:53:28 +0000enhourly1http://wordpress.com/https://s2.wp.com/i/buttonw-com.pngHelen Phifer Crime & Thriller Writerhttps://helenphifer.wordpress.com
Christmas Checklisthttps://helenphifer.wordpress.com/2013/12/11/christmas-checklist/
https://helenphifer.wordpress.com/2013/12/11/christmas-checklist/#respondWed, 11 Dec 2013 19:11:55 +0000http://helenphifer.wordpress.com/?p=163I hope by now that everyone is well on their way to being organised for Christmas. Are your decorations up, have you dressed your tree and wrapped your presents? No…..phew that’s good because I’m certainly not that organised.

My Christmas Checklist

Tree – Yes decidely it’s a very wonky one but it’s lit up and decorated. Even though it’s not the prettiest tree it smells divine and looks the part. Top tip for all you real Christmas tree fanatics – don’t buy it from a farm in the middle of nowhere when it’s dark unless you have a very good torch and a spirit level.

Decorations – Yes up to now I’ve decorated the hall, the front of the house, the kitchen and the living room. Phew a couple of glasses of wine helped to ease the pain. It’s taken a week but it looks very festive.

Presents – Hmn, erm, sort of. I have a lot of people to buy for which include five children, a granddaughter, two sets of parents and numerous nephews and nieces. I’ve made a really good start I think and I’m off to Manchester next week to hopefully finish off whatever it is I need. I’m sure that I will end up coming back with everything that I didn’t want or need but I’m looking forward to it.

Cards – I’ve made a start, which is all I’ll say on that subject. They normally get delivered on Christmas Eve after a large Baileys and it’s anyones guess which letterbox they get posted through.

Wherever you’re up to with your Christmas preparations I hope that it doesn’t overwhelm you and take away the magic of Christmas. I think that we are so busy working and rushing around we sometimes forget that the best and sometimes the worst part of Christmas is being able to spend time with the ones we love. It can be a special time of year as long as we don’t put too much pressure on ourselves, so what if the tree is wonky or I burn my sprouts again this year, the point is I’ve tried my best and that’s all anyone can ask.

When I first started to write fiction, my biggest fear when I walked into a bookshop (yes, digital authors do frequent print bookshops) would be that I picked up a book, read the dust-jacket, and found that it was the same as the one I was writing. Recently, though, I’ve come to think of this as less as a nightmare, more of an interesting point about literary trends.

We are often told there are only seven basic plots. Be that as it may – when two books come out that are strikingly similar, both in terms of plot, mood, and tone, that is something to take note of. Some particular cases in point recently have been Gone Girl v. Precious Thing, and Kiss Me First v. my very own Yours is Mine.

Now, we are all used to books proclaiming to be the next Gone Girl. Mine has been called that, I hope fairly. But the comparisons tend to be because of tone, or the use of two narrators, or just because it will keep you wake until 2am. Colette Mcbeth’s Precious Thing, as anyone who has read it will know, really is very similar to Gone Girl. I don’t want to spoil it for anyone, but the similarities in the way they both use perception shifts, the constant uncertainty as to whether one person is the criminal or the victim, plus the central disappearance, really is as uncanny as the tales they tell.

Closer to home, I was amazed when two books about identity switches, both by North London writers, came out within days of each other earlier this year. The first was Kiss Me First by Lottie Moggach, in which one woman agrees to masquerade as another on-line. The second was my debut thriller, Yours is Mine, in which one woman agrees to masquerade as another on-line – and in real life. The motivations and scenarios in each book are very different, but both Moggach and I have taken a vulnerable character as our protagonist, making her susceptible to the ulterior motives of on-line predators, and shown her life being exchanged and imperilled to various degrees.

You would think, maybe, that people would tire of this sort of story. But no: if my experience is anything to go by, we are delighted to find ourselves in familiar territory of the twisty thriller, not knowing who to trust, what the secret is, and there are enough differences to keep us hooked. The psychological motivations for the characters are different, and in Colette Mcbeth’s Precious Thing the focus is a destructive friendship, not a toxic marriage like in Gone Girl. In Yours is Mine, it is the other woman in the life exchange who is out to get the heroine, whereas is Moggach’s book, that other woman is also a victim of sorts.

So why do these books come in waves? For Yours is Mine and Kiss Me First, the answer is perhaps obvious: we are all putting so much more of our identities on-line, that the risks this poses make crime writers ask ‘what if?’. For Gone Girl and Precious Thing, perhaps it is the constant risk-taking when we make ourselves closer to one person than any other, never really knowing what that person is thinking, and the ever-increasing ability of the media to save or destroy reputations. Whatever the reason, for anyone who enjoys bringing a thrill to their Kindle, long may this doubling-up of chilling treats continue.

Today I’d like to welcome another fabulous Carina author Natasha Hardy to my blog. Her debut novel Water is out now to buy from all good e-book retailers.

But first some questions I’ve been desperate to ask and Natasha has very kindly taken the time to answer them, thanks Natasha……..

1. Where do you write?

I write in our outside area which has stack sliding doors which completely open up, and let in fresh air and loads of golden South African Sunshine.

2. Do you have any particular routines?

I try to write while the kids are at school so mostly in the mornings, but come deadline time, I write whenever I can.

3. Who has inspired you the most?

In writing it has to be Stephenie Meyer, mainly because I can relate to being so busy working and being a Mom and wife and finding writing as a bit of a “me time” escape.

4. What inspired this novel?

A camping trip I went on as a child to Injisuthi, a wildly beautiful part of the South African Drakensburg. On that trip we discovered rock encased pools of ice cold, crystal clear, turquoise blue water.

5. Your top three pieces of advice for any aspiring authors.

1. Write. No matter how busy you are, start your book.

2. Believe in your story.

3. Believe in your ability to tell that story uniquely.

6. If you could throw a come dine with me dinner party and invite any authors who would you ask and why?

William Shakespere- because I’d love to understand how that man just got human beings and described them agelessly.

J.R.Tolkien- because I’d love to know what other stories he had in his head that he didn’t get round to writing down.

Terry Prachett- because I think he’d add a touch of humour and sheer lunacy to the experience.

Stephenie Meyer- because I’d love to hear her impressions of the evening as she seems to have an affinity for understanding the connections between people.

Natasha Hardy began writing when the adventure of her life had turned dark and gloomy, as all adventures must at some point, if they are to be classified as a true adventure. It was in the depths of the winter of her adventure that she found a way, through writing, to escape into the sun.
Like most escapes it turned into an adventure all of its own, where characters have their own problems to solve, albeit far more complex problems involving mythical creatures that aren’t meant to exist, and expect far more than they reasonably should.
Her escapes, for there are many still to come, are sparked by the adventures she has had in the wildly beautiful South African bush, seasoned with the true stories of the explorers who make up her ancestry, and woven through with the intrigue, and sometimes sheer madness, of living in Africa.
She now spends most of her time-happily- in a world of words, and the rest trying to keep up with her part time rock star, full time doctor husband and their two gorgeously mischievous little boys.